psychocabbage
Contributor
yep, dont put yourself into harm to save someone (I bet all that goes out the window if it's a loved one)
but it sure seems that what your saying here is a corruption of what I was taught , almost cavalier
Thats part of the seriousness I put into it when I am telling a couple that they have to come to terms with the fact that if they turn around and find a loved one laying motionless on the bottom, no bubbles, and they are not skilled enough to recover the body, their #1 priority is to mark the spot and ascend properly and get help. Trying to get the body themselves puts them at risk and 1 dead person is better than 2.
Some of you really have a hard time with panic situations. I can see why training is a breeze for me. All crisis situations are, are an implied risk assessment. If you have a hard time dealing with mortality this may not be the activity for you. I am perfectly capable of staying calm and rational under the given circumstances but perhaps I have endured more trauma and been dulled by it in my lifetime.